I won’t miss Cody Hodgson the artful dodgeson

It ain’t me, it ain’t me, I ain’t no senator’s son, son

Cody Hodgson wanted out of Vancouver, on this there can be no debate. You can argue over the logic of the decision but the continued non-answers from Hodgson prior to the Sabres vs. Canucks game Saturday night is evidence enough that he doesn’t want to go on the record as denying a trade request.

His agent meanwhile took to Twitter to confirm that meetings had taken place regarding Hodgson’s ice time as recently as three days before the trade.

Don’t look for those tweets because they, along with month’s of Rich Winters’ tweets, mysteriously disappeared a couple of days ago.

Especially considering the long rumoured rifts between Hodgson and the organization during his injury troubles, to believe that Mike Gillis up and traded Hodgson last Monday entirely on his own impetus is absolutely naive and absurd.

Cody Hodgson asked for a trade

You can claim that Rich Winters may have been the more interested party in a trade with camp Cody, and certainly his family seems to have been pushing for this as well, but at the end of the day Cody Hodgson‘s career is Cody Hodgson’s.

Cody Hodgson wanted out of Vancouver

Considering he and his family have burned through three agents in four years, Hodgson does not defer responsibility in career decisions.

The argument over whether Cody Hodgson is a better player than Zack Kassian is completely irrelevant.

It seems pretty simple that the player who wants to be on your team will always perform better than the one who doesn’t. Hodgson’s situation, while not ideal for personal gain, had to be quite enviable for a young prospect.

Hodgson had a chance to chase a cup while learning behind two of the best centres in the game. As Kelly Hrudey pointed on on Hockey Night in Canada, Pat LaFontaine’s career didn’t suffer playing behind Bryan Trottier and Brent Sutter.

Somehow though Cody Hodgson’s ego told him that he should be getting top billing midway through his rookie season instead of paying his dues and growing organically as a player like say Ryan Kesler did.

Hodgson looked at the Edmonton Oilers and decided he preferred that situation over the one in Vancouver.

He saw Michael Grabner’s career path and got jealous.

Cody Hodgson chose himself over the team

He chose personal glory over his best and perhaps only chance to win the Cup in his career. Is that the type of player you want on the Canucks?

I understand that it hurts to see Hodgson leave, especially as the fallout settles and the truth is slowly being peeled back and revealed about his true intentions.

Ultimately though Hodgson was only in the system for a couple of years, and most of you reading this have been Canuck fans for life, fans of a team Hodgson decided he wanted to move on from.

It stings, but there will be other Hodgsons. There’s no need to stand outside of his window with a boombox (or an oversized iPad playing his Boston slapshot winner).

There’s other fish in the sea, there’s even one right now on the team called Zack Kassian who fills the team’s needs a lot more than Hodgson did and all he’s talked about is being excited to leave Buffalo and having a chance to win.

Doesn’t that sound like a preferable attitude?

It’s amazing as well to see Mike Gillis thrown out with the bathwater despite his impeccable track record.

What more does Gillis have to do to be entrusted to make the right hockey moves? To be fair though, these are probably the same people who believed Gillis should have committed $40 million to Christian Ehrhoff. Gillis is smarter than you and me, it’s just true.

Trust him, he hasn’t turned evil (yet).

Kassian who fills the team's needs a lot more than Hodgson did...

The #cryingforcody last week and the outcry for Gillis’ head was funnier than the last five years of Saturday Night Live combined. It was the epitome of #firstplaceproblems. Imagine being a Leafs fan right now.

Hell, imagine being a Canucks fan in the first 30 years of their existence, which admittedly most of the out-criers were probably too young to experience.

A common theme in the responses of various Vancouver Canucks regarding Hodgson last weekend was various forms of jokes about Hodgson having a big head.

I believe we call this kidding on the square. If you’re capable of reading between the lines, they’re as revealing as comments about Christian Ehrhoff and Raffi Torres have been this year.

This is a very, very close-knit locker room

The individual is not bigger than the team with the Vancouver Canucks.

This is all essentially confirmed by Eric Francis in a couple paragraphs here where he describes Hodgson as a high-maintenance individual on a team filled with players who have sacrificed ice time and left money on the table to win a Stanley Cup.

Even Rich Winters has admitted Hodgson and the Canucks had different goals, and we know the Canucks goal.

The past few years have seen a bounty of individual awards for the Vancouver Canucks but have not featured the ultimate team award just yet.

I would personally trade the Art Rosses, Selke, and Hart in a h(e)artbeat for the Stanley Cup. It’s not about the name on the back of the jersey, it’s about the crest on the front.

If you still believe trading Cody Hodgson was a bad move, it seems that you’ve forgotten that quite like Hodgson himself did.

Boy, a game against the Canucks in another team’s uniform can sure kill the fan nostalgia. Even if it is true that Hodgson asked for a trade, I can’t blame the guy for looking out for his career. He doesn’t have the skill-set to be a career third-line center like Jordan Staal, and he knew it. I’m happy he was able to find a new home while the Canucks were able to find value for him.